This article is based on a Research-project called Upper Secondary-pupils´ Creation
of Meaning in the Multicultural Classroom. In this project I and my fellow researcher
followed a class during their three years in Upper Secondary School, observing them
in lessons and performing interviews with them twice a term. In this article, my main
interlocutor/informant, who goes by the name Argita in the text, is a girl of Albanian
background, but who has had almost all her education in Swedish schools. I focus on
three problems, or questions: how and when are existential questions discussed in
the classroom and which role do they play in the teachers’ choice of subjects?
Second, I am interested in the multicultural classroom, or the culturally heterogeneous
classroom, as I prefer to call it. What does it denote and add up to? I
suggest that “multicultural” implies much more than just immigrants and Swedes
meeting in class. It is also about boys and girls, pupils with different economic and
cultural background and pupils representing different youth-cultures. Finally, I discuss
what is meant by the terms “offering meaning” and “creating meaning” in school.
Does all teaching offer meaning to pupils? I do not think so. Rather, I think that pupils,
such as Argita, have a capacity to create meaning, in their schoolwork and in their
lives, regardless of what school has to offer.